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Trypanosoma Cruzi and Domestic Animals Massimo Giangaspero * Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Italy * Corresponding author: Giangaspero M, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Strada Provinciale 18, 64020 Piano d’Accio, Teramo, Italy, E-mail: [email protected] Received date: June 05, 2017; Accepted date: June 07, 2017; Published date: June 09, 2017 Copyright: © 2017 Giangaspero M. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Abstract Chagas disease is one of the most important zoonosis affecting the Latin America. Despite important progress achieved in last decades through strategies at regional level against vectoral transmission and improvement of screening among blood donors, the disease continues to represent a public health priority. Knowledge on epidemiology of the etiological agent Tripanosoma cruzi is of outmost importance to counter this serious disease, with the potential to cause significant morbidity and mortality in humans. Many animal species are sensible to the infection, but their epidemiological role in sylvatic and peri domestic cycles have not been always elucidated. Therefore, attention should be paid by veterinarians especially on domestic animals in order to clarify their potential role as reservoir close to human communities. Keywords: Domestic animals; Epidemiology; Trypanosoma cruzi Editorial e Trypanosoma cruzi assumes a particular interest due to its geographic specificity and impact on human health. e American human trypanosomiasis, also known as Chagas disease, caused by Trypanosoma cruzi and transmitted by bugs (triatomes of the Reduvidae family), is probably the most important zoonosis typically south-American, with 6 to 7 million of cases reported to the World Health Organization (WHO), but with estimations reaching up to 13 million, with 3-3.3 million of symptomatic cases and an annual incidence of 200,000 cases [1,2], primarily in endemic zones of countries in Latin America where more than 100 million of people are exposed, and it is responsible of more than 10,000 deaths per year [1]. A disease that continues to represent a public health priority, despite important progress achieved in last decades through strategies applied at regional level against vectoral transmission and improvement of transfusion safety by screening among blood donors. Despite the clear importance of the disease, its epidemiology is not always sufficiently known or updated even in the human population. For example, the French Guyana, located in the middle of this serious epidemiological situation, for long time seemed spared and considered as a low risk zone for the emergence of the Chagas disease. In 1940, a first case has been described, followed by very rare other reports [3-5]. But this believe was simply based on the absence of diagnosis, mainly due to the lack of cardiologists for long time. e starting of regular cardiological consultations at Cayenne changed rapidly this notion revealing a rising number of cases of clinical suspicion compatible with an infection due to T. cruzi as well as confirmed cases [6]. e 36 confirmed cases in 2005 [6] in absence of a surveillance system, suggest that the infection is probably under-diagnosed in the country. In addition, 70 to 80 patients hospitalized every year show signs of cardiac involvement compatible with the chronic form of Chagas disease. According to a quantitative estimation of the disease in French Guyana, and in the neighboring countries of Guyana and Suriname, the serological prevalence corresponded to about 1.2% of the human population [7]. All mammals are susceptible to the infection. erefore, the disease is a zoonosis with an important domestic and wild animal reservoir. Domestic species as dogs, cats, large and small ruminants, rabbits and horses, and more than 150 wild animal species, including armadillo, racoon and vampire bat Desmodus rotundus, are potential reservoirs [8]. Exception made for dogs and apes that can develop severe clinical forms, T. cruzi is able to infect domestic and wild animals in Latin America with no or almost negligible clinic and economic impact. A possible interference with diagnostic for another animal trypanosomiases as T. vivax may occur. At contrary, this is important for the diffusion of the disease to man. An important number of animal species take part to the maintain of the infection being potentially infected and making the epidemiology of this disease particularly complex. e wild fauna plays a relevant role. For example, marsupials like the opossum (Didelphis marsupialis), locally named as « Pian » or « Manicou », are frequently infected and represent a real reservoir and biological vector by the typical stercorarian cyclical transmission of T. cruzi, diffusing the parasite through their excreta, corresponding to the process occurring in the Triatominae insects. Another example is given by the high frequency of infection observed in certain wild species, and the ways of maintenance of such infections within the species. e majority of Molossus molossus, south American species of insectivorous bats, result infected (up to 80%) as well as the almost totality of their fetuses, indicating a very high susceptibility and regular vertical transmission [9]. Even poultry, which are not sensible to the infection, play a supporting role for the maintain of the risk by nourishing the triatomines population peri domiciliary. Nevertheless, in veterinary medicine only some cases have been detected in dogs in the territory of the French Guyana. e recent emergence of canine trypanosomiasis at Cayenne was revealed through the detection of 20 cases characterized by high mortality (75%) between 2003 and 2005 [6]. Among species of the wild fauna, the first described natural hosts of T. cruzi in French Guyana were the armadillo and the opossum (D. marsupialis) [10,11]. Out of the four species of armadillo present in Guyana (Cabassous unicinctus, Kappler Clinical Microbiology: Open Access Giangaspero, Clin Microbiol 2017, 6:3 DOI: 10.4172/2327-5073.1000e142 Editorial Open Access Clin Microbiol, an open access journal ISSN:2327-5073 Volume 6 • Issue 3 • 1000e142 C l i n i c a l M i c r o b i o l o g y : O p e n A c c e s s ISSN: 2327-5073
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Trypanosoma Cruzi and Domestic Animals

Jul 10, 2023

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